I could watch videos like this for hours. Please please please make more smaller detailed pieces. I've watched how to build a house a billion times by now.
Perfect because I have another batch of veggie patches on the way and then a heap of fruit trees. Haha yer look im sure there will be a random house build in the future of the channel at some point but My favourite thing is making things that I havnt seen before.
@SebMakesStuff I can't wait to see more outdoor garden stuff. It's my favorite. And..... I could really use the interior of a magic school. I haven't seen that done before. Like a mage's college, not Harry Potter 🤷♀️ Just throwing that out into the universe.... lol
Thank you very much! I am a teacher in the Brazilian public school system with 6th and 7th grade classes. We are delighted with your incredible work! Please continue creating more amazing videos, because we will be here waiting...
Have you tried the snowflake hole punch trick to make cabbages? Holepunch a bunch of green paper, layer them on top of each other. Glue a wood or plastic bead in the middle. Glue some of the arms up around the bead. Bosh! Instant brasica fields. You can use a smaller one to make foliag for tuber veg (carrots, parsnips, etc.)
DM: In front of you you see a farm with many crops. Each of them have some vegetables or fruits. There's tomatoes so red that they look like they would burn. Corn so juicy that in one bite all juice would dripped down. The pumpkins are so big that they would create army of headless horsemen. There's also beans ready to be harvest. You can even see grapes that they bending on the branch. Looking at this beautiful farm you felt cozy wormth in your hearth and that you soul is calmed.
@SebMakesStuff Oh, thank you. It's my first time. I few times play D&D game, but I watched videos on youtube where they recorded D&D session and I tried my best to carefully create the DM narration. Also I didn't know my comment will be noticed and used to the next DM session. I'm really grateful for this honnor.
It's too good not to notice haha. The best part of this youtube thing is finding a community that love the things I love! You're gonna do great behind the dm screen if this is your first try
Well I ran my first ever game as a dm without ever having played haha, I learned it all from critical role and other podcasts. We talk about DMing a lot over at 'tomes and tales rpg' in our above the table podcast and we often get to the point that the dm shouldn't be to worried as you're putting in effort to make something fun for the table so the table should appreciate you for that
Pepper corns works great for cabbages. Really if you look for textures in the herbs/spices section there's a lot of cool stuff to be found. And all of it is dried plant material so it all sucks up watered down pva perfect for game durability.
I was just saying in one of the other comments that I want to.try and do another one of these garden beds but entirely from the herbs and spices isle of the local grocery shop. Because I had this realisation just after finishing this video. I'll definitely be trying out the pepper corns tho, cheers for the advice
I decided to scan through the comments to see if anyone else had fun ideas for more … I see that peppercorn trick is very well known 😂 Though the shoutout about rose beads is a good one! I’ve got some paper scrapbooking roses set aside for just that purpose!
Oh yer I've been given some really good ideas in these comments. There's gonna be a couple of follow up videos for sure. I think there will be a 'herbs and spices' and a 'beads' veggie patch at minimum
That means so much, thankyou. I put a lot into this channel and it's all out of fun and hope that I can encourage others to get creative. These kind of comments make my day. Thankyou
Love thay. I actually thought about that while I was editing this video. I may have to do another one of these but making the veggie patches with thing's from the herbs and spices isle
Really love these tiny gardens. I love seeing how to use scraps and everyday items to make miniatures! My general store def needs some of those cabbages!
I've heard this a couple of times now. I think I'll be doing a follow up to this video making veggie patches from things I find at the grocery store. Cheers for the input, always live finding new ways to do things
Ahh perfect, aren't they a great combination of hobbies! If the 3d printing stuff is a part of this hobby you're into. I would reccomend the channel hoochos, if you havnt already seen him. He's a mate of mine that does gardening content with a lot of 3d printing.
@@SebMakesStuff I live in a small basement suite where the fumes off a resin printer would be dangerous and space for a printer and wash/curing would mean getting rid of something. I might change my mind once fdm printers get better at minis, but at the moment I am avoiding a printer. Since I love scratch building stuff, sculpting and kitbashing and dislike troubleshooting computers, this isn't much of a downer.
Haha yer I don't blame you. As much as I live thr printers when we need something quick or specific for a game. They can be more trouble than they're worth sometimes. Plus scratch building is far more rewarding
Done pumpkins and cabbages in the past with cheap beads from the craft store. Quick prime and repaint and glue them down. Vines are just strong and twine with sawdust flock or sponge clump foliage
thanks for sharing the veggie garden. Last Halloween I made a large pumpkin patch with a giant Pumpkin King/Demon as the BBEG. It's loads of fun to make
I have seen twisted paper balls used for cabbages or lettuce. I like the concept of small gardens and orchards to fill out a gaming table. I cannot count how many adventures for D&D or Pathfinder that have had the characters helping a farmer. It would be nice to have some fields of grain or vegetables to set the scene.
I'll have to add this to my veggie patches 2.0 video that I'm currently working on. Taking in all the notes and ideas people have given me in these comments. And I agree, they are such useful scatter terrain for half the environments I put down on the game table. I think I need more big farm sections next aswell
Killing it with these builds lately mate. I am still catching up from 6 weeks in China. As I listen to the T&T pods rather than watch usually it is good to still get to 'see' the terrain
Oure very welcome, I was the same, always wanting more plants and farms without going too big. So I finally decided to do it myself and I'm very happy with hoe they came up
I've got a pile of pieces of plowed and early growth patches for my tables that I made a while back. I used a decently sized thin plywood laser cut shape from the craft store for a base, then got the shape of my plowed area decided and cut out of corrugated cardboard, did a mix of peel and cut through of the cladding paper on one side before gluing it down on the base, soaked it with thinned glue and then worked some hot glue down in the corrugation with a thin spreading move through it after the thinned white glue cured. Then used some filler around the edges to cover them and blend them into the base. Some have a fence around the edges, others weren't getting that which I added. Then covered the area with the corrgation with a finer texture paste mix and a rougher one around the edges where it wasn't plowed. A bit of paint and flock the edges to have the basics, you can add bits and pieces of different flocking to the ridges of the corrgated areas for sprouting or smaller plants. You can also use some of the bristle welcome mats to make wheat and similar fields...
I've actually been wanting to do something like this myself at some point for some bigger farm fields. I'll be saving this comment and trying your approach for sure. Cheers
@@SebMakesStuff Wish that I still had some of my old WIP pics from when I first made some, but those got wrecked when photobucket started screwing with people after a computer change for me. First ones I did were part of a larger piece using the log cabin kits that Hobby Lobby sells in their modeling/diorama section that I was putting on larger rounds to start with and had documented the entire thing with posts on the Lead Adventure Forums and on DM Scotty's boards
@@SebMakesStuff you can also use small orange beads as carrots. Stick a little greenery in the hole for the leaves then push them partly into soft/not set dirt of choice. They look like the very tops of carrots ready to pick…could use random coloured beads for magic carrots/parsnips
Yer looking back at it now I agree. But I kind of rushed them down to show people who don't want to craft that there are still options out there. I'm gonna have to try some diy pumpkins soon tho. Got another veggie patch video coming thanks to all the awesome ideas is the comments
Those are some fine tomato bushes. :) Having a little greenery on the battlefield is always good, and these would be amazing in any Bunnies & Burrows game.
@@SebMakesStuff It's based on the old school book and 1979 film Watership Down setting - you play as regular, ordinary bunny rabbits dealing with survival. Settings can have a very rich lore and can be as silly or mature as you want depending on your player's age group. There's also a more grimdark version called The Warren which I prefer. Trailer for The Warren: th-cam.com/video/mqk96brHEQ8/w-d-xo.html Original WD movie: th-cam.com/video/iI3voOtHpZ4/w-d-xo.html If you read the original Richard Addams book, it goes right into rabbit culture, psuedo-religion, their folklore, the lapine language and all the bits that made it a bestseller.
I’m always so relieved to see people using foam board coz so many people use xps foam and you can’t get that where I am! (West Australia, Bunnings used to have it but now they just have a cheap, apparently really bad quality version of it)
Have another look at bunnings. They were stocking a terrible quality foam for a while but Towards the end of last year all my local bunnings started getting a good quality xps foam again.
Where do you get your foam board from exactly? I'm Victoria based, and nothing I've tried from officeworks, spotlight or my local stores tears off as easily as you just did...
Hey Seb! Love your veggie patches! Have you ever seen Nat 1 videos? I watched his Mirkwood video, and now I'm making Mirkwood for my group! So, now that I've watched your video, I'll probably start making veggie patches! Lol!
Hey mate, cheers...I'm already working on veggie patches 2.0 using beads and stuff from the herbs and spices isle at the grocery shop. I've seen Nat 1s videos in the past but don't think I've seen the mirkwood one. Ill be doing that now tho haha.
Goo Gone might also be a good solution for removing the paper from the foam board. I would spread it as thinly as possible to reduce residue and product use. Then again, the cost of it might make it more worthwhile to spring for the expensive foam board.
I've never gmhesr of the the goo gone. I'll have to check it out. I'm lucky enough to have a good supply that peels off nicely. But next time I get some cheap stuff that doesn't play so nice I'll try it out
@@SebMakesStuff Even some of the more expensive stuff can sometimes stick...I tend to use the Readiboard from dollar tree. As a side note, I did find that even some with paper still stuck on can actually work relatively well if you want to use it to make it look like rock striations in taller things...found that out during the covid lockdowns when the thicker foam wasn't available to get and I had some things I wanted to work on that were larger pieces so was stacking foamcore pieces and didn't take all the time there
@@SebMakesStuff It's an adhesive remover that uses d-Limonene as its main ingredient, though it includes small amounts of a few other solvents. I've never had it damage anything, but it can leave behind a residue that cleans up with alcohol. I would test it on a sacrificial piece of board first, and might even just pre-mix a small bit of it with alcohol to see if it could just be used to increase the alcohol's effectiveness.
So keen to try some of these. I wonder if you could use paper and small round beads to make cabbages? I might give that a go as I don't have a 3D printer.
Absolutely I have been thinking of alternative ways to make these myself. I'll probably do another veggie patch video in the future with a few more things. But if you come up with a good option send me the pics, I could always use the inspo
That is a very good question. There was only one size when I went in so I'm not 109% sure. But I'll see if I can find the box when I unpack the studio (currently have everything packed up for a house move)
not yet, but im now looking into setting one up. so hopefully for future builds i can have a space with everything im using, or near enough alternatives
@@SebMakesStuff I need to make a few tribute videos one for you one for DM Scotty one for Black Magic Craft one for Wylock I have piles of stuff I've made from videos like yours, it's just my videos all suck
Haha We all think our own videos suck. But i would love to see them. And I'm sure the others would too. Nothing encourages me more than seeing people redo my builds
Ohhhh I wish I had a good way. I usually end up washing my hands with isopropyl alcohol. Or end up scrapping it off very carefully with a scalpel. But that can lead to more hard than good haha
I'm not sure off the top of my head but I know that the guys I mention in here and in the comments will deliver everywhere. But if you do find a good alternative let me know so I can throw the link up for others over there
@SebMakesStuff it's a free wargame vaguely in the style of older napoleonic games. The story and world of the game is bizarre. An eldrich turnip has taken over the world, choking out almost all life and replacing it with vegetable based facsimile. Which sounds scary until you realize how silly it is. Its been described as grimdark Monty Python, which I'd say is accurate.
I highly recommend watching A Fully Narrative Wargame Experiment - TURNIP28 Battle Report by Bruva Alfabusa here on youtube.It's a perfect representation of the tone the game sets and absolutely hilarious.
I think the printers are great for people who don't have the time or patience but want something fun on the table. But I for one prefer the actual crafting. It's so fun to make things from scratch
I could watch videos like this for hours. Please please please make more smaller detailed pieces. I've watched how to build a house a billion times by now.
Perfect because I have another batch of veggie patches on the way and then a heap of fruit trees. Haha yer look im sure there will be a random house build in the future of the channel at some point but My favourite thing is making things that I havnt seen before.
@SebMakesStuff I can't wait to see more outdoor garden stuff. It's my favorite. And..... I could really use the interior of a magic school. I haven't seen that done before. Like a mage's college, not Harry Potter 🤷♀️ Just throwing that out into the universe.... lol
Very interesting .....and now it's on the list! The universe has heard you
@@SebMakesStuff You are a treasure
Thank you very much! I am a teacher in the Brazilian public school system with 6th and 7th grade classes. We are delighted with your incredible work! Please continue creating more amazing videos, because we will be here waiting...
This has made my day! A massive thankyou for your support and I hope you and your class have an awesome new year! And I will never stop making stuff 😁
Have you tried the snowflake hole punch trick to make cabbages? Holepunch a bunch of green paper, layer them on top of each other. Glue a wood or plastic bead in the middle. Glue some of the arms up around the bead. Bosh! Instant brasica fields. You can use a smaller one to make foliag for tuber veg (carrots, parsnips, etc.)
Oh this is a great idea. I'm gonna have to keep my eye out for a snowflake hole punch. Cheers for the advice
DM: In front of you you see a farm with many crops. Each of them have some vegetables or fruits. There's tomatoes so red that they look like they would burn. Corn so juicy that in one bite all juice would dripped down. The pumpkins are so big that they would create army of headless horsemen. There's also beans ready to be harvest. You can even see grapes that they bending on the branch. Looking at this beautiful farm you felt cozy wormth in your hearth and that you soul is calmed.
Ohhh, I'm saving this in my dm notes folder
@SebMakesStuff Oh, thank you. It's my first time. I few times play D&D game, but I watched videos on youtube where they recorded D&D session and I tried my best to carefully create the DM narration. Also I didn't know my comment will be noticed and used to the next DM session. I'm really grateful for this honnor.
It's too good not to notice haha. The best part of this youtube thing is finding a community that love the things I love! You're gonna do great behind the dm screen if this is your first try
@@SebMakesStuff Ow really. I don't if I can be a good DM. I only played a few session. But it was long time ago and people didn't invite me anymore.
Well I ran my first ever game as a dm without ever having played haha, I learned it all from critical role and other podcasts.
We talk about DMing a lot over at 'tomes and tales rpg' in our above the table podcast and we often get to the point that the dm shouldn't be to worried as you're putting in effort to make something fun for the table so the table should appreciate you for that
How Dare you bring value to this hobby!! These look great!
Thankyou kindly. Haha I'll bring whatever value I can to help increase everyone's games or crafting fun
Pepper corns works great for cabbages.
Really if you look for textures in the herbs/spices section there's a lot of cool stuff to be found. And all of it is dried plant material so it all sucks up watered down pva perfect for game durability.
I was just saying in one of the other comments that I want to.try and do another one of these garden beds but entirely from the herbs and spices isle of the local grocery shop. Because I had this realisation just after finishing this video. I'll definitely be trying out the pepper corns tho, cheers for the advice
I always love seeing garden patches made for the tabletop! These turned out so well!
Also, dried peppercorns make good cabbages if you don’t have a 3D printer
Me too, as a gardener myself it's lie a cross over of my hobbies.
And Thankyou 😁
I decided to scan through the comments to see if anyone else had fun ideas for more … I see that peppercorn trick is very well known 😂
Though the shoutout about rose beads is a good one! I’ve got some paper scrapbooking roses set aside for just that purpose!
Oh yer I've been given some really good ideas in these comments. There's gonna be a couple of follow up videos for sure.
I think there will be a 'herbs and spices' and a 'beads' veggie patch at minimum
Excellent! 👏
IMO, one of the best terrain video makers on YT. Interesting and FUN projects which don't assume a great deal of exertise.
That means so much, thankyou. I put a lot into this channel and it's all out of fun and hope that I can encourage others to get creative. These kind of comments make my day. Thankyou
MY CABBAGES!!!
Haha ohhh I should make a cabbage cart!
Nice work! I use peppercorns for miniature fruits and vegetables
Love thay. I actually thought about that while I was editing this video. I may have to do another one of these but making the veggie patches with thing's from the herbs and spices isle
@@SebMakesStuff I also use dried herbs as leaf litter flock and acorn caps as wooden bowls
I don't know where I would find any acorns in my area. But the dried herbs is always a great go to.
Really love these tiny gardens. I love seeing how to use scraps and everyday items to make miniatures! My general store def needs some of those cabbages!
Thankyou kindly 😁 I'm now on the constant look out for new things to make veggies out of haha
For those without printers, I’ve seen peppercorn used as miniature cabbage
I've heard this a couple of times now. I think I'll be doing a follow up to this video making veggie patches from things I find at the grocery store. Cheers for the input, always live finding new ways to do things
So freaking cute. It gives me some great ideas for my 1/12 scale herbs and veggies
I really need to play around in some different scales. It would be a lot of fun to think of things at a 1/12 scale instead of my normal 1/48
I am an organic food gardener who also builds/paints wargaming terrain and minis. So this is great!
Ahh perfect, aren't they a great combination of hobbies!
If the 3d printing stuff is a part of this hobby you're into. I would reccomend the channel hoochos, if you havnt already seen him. He's a mate of mine that does gardening content with a lot of 3d printing.
@@SebMakesStuff I live in a small basement suite where the fumes off a resin printer would be dangerous and space for a printer and wash/curing would mean getting rid of something. I might change my mind once fdm printers get better at minis, but at the moment I am avoiding a printer. Since I love scratch building stuff, sculpting and kitbashing and dislike troubleshooting computers, this isn't much of a downer.
Haha yer I don't blame you. As much as I live thr printers when we need something quick or specific for a game. They can be more trouble than they're worth sometimes.
Plus scratch building is far more rewarding
Done pumpkins and cabbages in the past with cheap beads from the craft store. Quick prime and repaint and glue them down. Vines are just strong and twine with sawdust flock or sponge clump foliage
Beads are a great idea for pumpkins. I had another comment mention rose shaped beads for lettuce and cabbage which I thought was great aswell
thanks for sharing the veggie garden. Last Halloween I made a large pumpkin patch with a giant Pumpkin King/Demon as the BBEG. It's loads of fun to make
Haha i pove thaym I actually found a few cool evil pumpkins that I thought about using myself.
I have seen twisted paper balls used for cabbages or lettuce. I like the concept of small gardens and orchards to fill out a gaming table.
I cannot count how many adventures for D&D or Pathfinder that have had the characters helping a farmer. It would be nice to have some fields of grain or vegetables to set the scene.
I'll have to add this to my veggie patches 2.0 video that I'm currently working on. Taking in all the notes and ideas people have given me in these comments.
And I agree, they are such useful scatter terrain for half the environments I put down on the game table. I think I need more big farm sections next aswell
Subscribed only 10 seconds into this video. A sorely needed tutorial. Both real and mini gardens are awesome!
Welcome to my nerdy madness! I've got a few more veggie patch videos planned now thanks to all the great ideas in the comments
Those turned out really nice!!! Chives are blue flowers that look very much like those! 😄 Looking forward to the Hobbit projects!
Perfect, they are now chives in my head cannon haha
@@SebMakesStuff Ha! Awesome!!! 😁😁😁
The veggie patches look amazing!! Definitely usable for many scenarios 😊😊😊
Thankyou 😁 csnt wait to get than out in the table. I've got more planned
@@SebMakesStuff you are welcome 🤗
Can’t wait to see what is next 😊
Killing it with these builds lately mate. I am still catching up from 6 weeks in China. As I listen to the T&T pods rather than watch usually it is good to still get to 'see' the terrain
I forget that people just listen to the podcast sometimes haha. We should post more imagery of out battle maps for the audio only crew
I have been searching for a video like this for so long! Thank you!
Oure very welcome, I was the same, always wanting more plants and farms without going too big. So I finally decided to do it myself and I'm very happy with hoe they came up
Excellent work.
Thankyou kindly
I've got a pile of pieces of plowed and early growth patches for my tables that I made a while back.
I used a decently sized thin plywood laser cut shape from the craft store for a base, then got the shape of my plowed area decided and cut out of corrugated cardboard, did a mix of peel and cut through of the cladding paper on one side before gluing it down on the base, soaked it with thinned glue and then worked some hot glue down in the corrugation with a thin spreading move through it after the thinned white glue cured. Then used some filler around the edges to cover them and blend them into the base. Some have a fence around the edges, others weren't getting that which I added. Then covered the area with the corrgation with a finer texture paste mix and a rougher one around the edges where it wasn't plowed. A bit of paint and flock the edges to have the basics, you can add bits and pieces of different flocking to the ridges of the corrgated areas for sprouting or smaller plants.
You can also use some of the bristle welcome mats to make wheat and similar fields...
I've actually been wanting to do something like this myself at some point for some bigger farm fields. I'll be saving this comment and trying your approach for sure. Cheers
@@SebMakesStuff Wish that I still had some of my old WIP pics from when I first made some, but those got wrecked when photobucket started screwing with people after a computer change for me. First ones I did were part of a larger piece using the log cabin kits that Hobby Lobby sells in their modeling/diorama section that I was putting on larger rounds to start with and had documented the entire thing with posts on the Lead Adventure Forums and on DM Scotty's boards
Excellent! Thank you for the inspiring video.
Thankyou for watching, glad to be of service
These all look so good! Ive used wooden beads as watermelons before….but now i need to try some of these.
I'm adding this to my list of ideas to try!
@@SebMakesStuff sweet! Can’t wait to see what you come up with!
@@SebMakesStuff you can also use small orange beads as carrots. Stick a little greenery in the hole for the leaves then push them partly into soft/not set dirt of choice. They look like the very tops of carrots ready to pick…could use random coloured beads for magic carrots/parsnips
Oh that's great aswell!
@@SebMakesStuff Thanks 😊 I made a gnome home out of an old fish tank log decoration and had to get creative with the tiny gardens 😁
I dig it! I think I would of took the mold lines off the pumpkins just because they stick out really bad. But still really great ideas.
Yer looking back at it now I agree. But I kind of rushed them down to show people who don't want to craft that there are still options out there.
I'm gonna have to try some diy pumpkins soon tho. Got another veggie patch video coming thanks to all the awesome ideas is the comments
These are really great! Thanks for sharing
Thankyou 😁 always happy to share my crafting with this amazing community we have
I'm so happy about this right now
Thank you. :D
Thankyou kindly :) These excite me too, I think I'll be making a few more in the future. See what other plants I can get down in the table
Those are some fine tomato bushes. :) Having a little greenery on the battlefield is always good, and these would be amazing in any Bunnies & Burrows game.
I've not heard of bunnies and burrows. But I'm going to have to look it up now because that sounds like my vibe haha
@@SebMakesStuff It's based on the old school book and 1979 film Watership Down setting - you play as regular, ordinary bunny rabbits dealing with survival. Settings can have a very rich lore and can be as silly or mature as you want depending on your player's age group. There's also a more grimdark version called The Warren which I prefer.
Trailer for The Warren: th-cam.com/video/mqk96brHEQ8/w-d-xo.html
Original WD movie: th-cam.com/video/iI3voOtHpZ4/w-d-xo.html If you read the original Richard Addams book, it goes right into rabbit culture, psuedo-religion, their folklore, the lapine language and all the bits that made it a bestseller.
Good vid, mate. Cheers for the links, too. this is gonna go great for my Empire village terrain for warhammer fantasy.
Would live to see how that comes out, I always live a good warhammer fantasy build
I’m always so relieved to see people using foam board coz so many people use xps foam and you can’t get that where I am! (West Australia, Bunnings used to have it but now they just have a cheap, apparently really bad quality version of it)
Have another look at bunnings. They were stocking a terrible quality foam for a while but Towards the end of last year all my local bunnings started getting a good quality xps foam again.
@ really?!? That would be a god send! Thanks so much for the tip off!
Where do you get your foam board from exactly? I'm Victoria based, and nothing I've tried from officeworks, spotlight or my local stores tears off as easily as you just did...
Great Video, I really love your work.
Thank you kindly! Got a few more veggie patches coming after getting a lot of great ideas from the comments
@@SebMakesStuff Looking forward to it.
I just discovered you but I already LOVE! your videos
Thankyou kindly 😁 there are plenty more coming as my hobby brain never stops haha
Love itt!! Very creative and fun video :)
Thankyou kindly 😁 I love making wargaming crafts that could double as a fairy garden haha
Hey Seb! Love your veggie patches! Have you ever seen Nat 1 videos? I watched his Mirkwood video, and now I'm making Mirkwood for my group! So, now that I've watched your video, I'll probably start making veggie patches! Lol!
Hey mate, cheers...I'm already working on veggie patches 2.0 using beads and stuff from the herbs and spices isle at the grocery shop.
I've seen Nat 1s videos in the past but don't think I've seen the mirkwood one. Ill be doing that now tho haha.
Goo Gone might also be a good solution for removing the paper from the foam board. I would spread it as thinly as possible to reduce residue and product use. Then again, the cost of it might make it more worthwhile to spring for the expensive foam board.
With a lot of them, you can also use a heat gun or hair dryer.
I've never gmhesr of the the goo gone. I'll have to check it out. I'm lucky enough to have a good supply that peels off nicely. But next time I get some cheap stuff that doesn't play so nice I'll try it out
@@SebMakesStuff Even some of the more expensive stuff can sometimes stick...I tend to use the Readiboard from dollar tree.
As a side note, I did find that even some with paper still stuck on can actually work relatively well if you want to use it to make it look like rock striations in taller things...found that out during the covid lockdowns when the thicker foam wasn't available to get and I had some things I wanted to work on that were larger pieces so was stacking foamcore pieces and didn't take all the time there
@@SebMakesStuff It's an adhesive remover that uses d-Limonene as its main ingredient, though it includes small amounts of a few other solvents. I've never had it damage anything, but it can leave behind a residue that cleans up with alcohol.
I would test it on a sacrificial piece of board first, and might even just pre-mix a small bit of it with alcohol to see if it could just be used to increase the alcohol's effectiveness.
Good video, i have the majority of what i need to make it and my local hobby lobby has some model vegetables i can use
Keep an eye out, I have a few more veggie patch videos coming now after getting a lot of great ideas form the comments!
So I'm new to the channel, and as I skimmed by the thumbnail I was like, "Wait, Adam Conover makes terrain?"
Haha I've heard this a lot. I felt like I should find a way to play into it.
@@SebMakesStuff Maybe a joking bit like 'Seb Ruins Everything', if you've got something related to the hobby you would like to expose?
Haha I feel like we do that a little bit over on my other channel tomes and tales. I think it might have to get snuck in to something soon
This guy is infinitely better than Adam.
Quar..quar love veggies.. vegi gardens need houses...
You could use ABS resin, its very bendy still when cured
I just ordered a batch of that for some fragile minis. I'll have to test it with some of this corn
So keen to try some of these. I wonder if you could use paper and small round beads to make cabbages? I might give that a go as I don't have a 3D printer.
Absolutely I have been thinking of alternative ways to make these myself. I'll probably do another veggie patch video in the future with a few more things. But if you come up with a good option send me the pics, I could always use the inspo
The big box craft stores often have beads that are supposed to be rose ish that might work well as a cabbage with the right paint
Cool I'll keep a look out.
Oh that's a great idea, I actually think I have some if those
What size of pumpkins did you get from the modellers warehouse?
That is a very good question. There was only one size when I went in so I'm not 109% sure. But I'll see if I can find the box when I unpack the studio (currently have everything packed up for a house move)
Do you have a amazon frontstore with all material?
not yet, but im now looking into setting one up. so hopefully for future builds i can have a space with everything im using, or near enough alternatives
Misting the paper on the foam board (with a spray bottle) makes it peel in one big piece, ime
Yer always handy, especially with the cheaper stuff that doesn't want to come off
12:03 now this is more like it! Hell yeah I'm making myself a garden today
Live this! Would love to see how your gardens come up!
@@SebMakesStuff I need to make a few tribute videos one for you one for DM Scotty one for Black Magic Craft one for Wylock I have piles of stuff I've made from videos like yours, it's just my videos all suck
Haha We all think our own videos suck. But i would love to see them. And I'm sure the others would too. Nothing encourages me more than seeing people redo my builds
Amazing video as always! I was also wondering if you have any tips on getting that pesky superglue off your fingers?
Ohhhh I wish I had a good way. I usually end up washing my hands with isopropyl alcohol. Or end up scrapping it off very carefully with a scalpel. But that can lead to more hard than good haha
New sub ✌️
Welcome to the madness
Do you have a link for the 3d bits?
Yer the link for the ones I used is in the description
Ty
Clever, I really dig the vines! Do you know if there is a similar/alternative site for EU people?
I'm not sure off the top of my head but I know that the guys I mention in here and in the comments will deliver everywhere. But if you do find a good alternative let me know so I can throw the link up for others over there
very turnip28, very awesome
Thankyou kindly
Kind of the opposite vibe of this entire video, but I'd love to see how something like this could be used for a Turnip28 army/terrain.
You're not the first person to mention this turnip28 thing. I had never heard of it before now. I think I might have to look into it tho.
@SebMakesStuff it's a free wargame vaguely in the style of older napoleonic games. The story and world of the game is bizarre. An eldrich turnip has taken over the world, choking out almost all life and replacing it with vegetable based facsimile. Which sounds scary until you realize how silly it is. Its been described as grimdark Monty Python, which I'd say is accurate.
I highly recommend watching A Fully Narrative Wargame Experiment - TURNIP28 Battle Report by Bruva Alfabusa
here on youtube.It's a perfect representation of the tone the game sets and absolutely hilarious.
Heya! Have you heard of Turnip 28? I'd love to know if you have any tips for terrain boards
I hadn't until I made this video then everyone has been mentioning it. I'm going to have to have a deep dive i think and find out more
seb buys stuff 😂
Oh yer I buy too much stuff
The 3D printer is the worst thing to happen to this type of craft. Anyone can 3D print something, I want to know how to make things myself
I think the printers are great for people who don't have the time or patience but want something fun on the table. But I for one prefer the actual crafting. It's so fun to make things from scratch
same, i also can't stand how toxic the resin is
Haha yer I'm glad to keep that in the fa back corner of the garage away from all loving things
But you can make things yourself in 3d software and then print it, isnt it?
@@MyKiruha no